Sunday, March 12, 2017

Writing a Novel!

One of the reasons why I haven't been blogging much lately is that I have another blog only viewable by me as I work on writing the first book of a fantasy series that I have had swimming around in my head for over a decade. It's not the always evolving plot that has been in my head so much as some of the principle characters and imagined world that I wish I too could find my way into one day.

Without wanting to give too much away, here are a few of the many fantastic drawings I found and pinned on a locked Pinterest board that most closely match some of the settings in my novel:








Sunday, February 5, 2017

Board Games!

I finally expanded my storage space and have a whole bookcase to store my board games. Newest games purchased, next to try: Pandemic, Forbidden Desert, and the expansion to Castle Panic. I also found a great game store called Labyrinth, just by the Eastern Market Metro station: Labyrinth



My current favorite: Pandemic. I roped my mother into coming over for a day of geeky gaming the other day and we managed to win the first time through (she takes gaming very seriously--good thing this is a cooperative game!), so next time we may need to set the difficulty level higher than "novice", but a great game with lots of available expansions.


Saturday, January 21, 2017

Women's March on Washington, 21 January, 2017

After watching yesterday's historically depressing inauguration, it was great to head downtown with my mother to participate in the March on Washington, along with a crowd rivaling the largest Vietnam War protests, some of which my mother participated in. Minimum crowd estimate so far is 500,000 but those of us who were there are certain the crowd was substantially larger. The Metro was so crowded, although we just barely grabbed a spot just inside the doors of a train going downtown in the morning, we gave up trying to get back to my neighborhood on the Metro and walked all the way from the White House, through Dupont Circle, to my apartment.

The March was entirely peaceful so I did laugh a little when I overheard one Trump supporter say to another (inside the Natural History Museum, where we stopped in briefly for lunch), "I like your hat" (referring to the red baseball hats that say "Make America Great Again"), to which the other Trump supporter said "I like yours too; it makes me feel safe"(referring to us protestors, most of whom wore pink "pussy hats").










Friday, January 13, 2017

DC thanks Obama

I passed by this wonderful display of notes thanking the Obamas at a quirky little store called "Wake Up Little Suzie" where I often shop ion my way to get groceries at the local market. Next week will be sad indeed...





Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Anassa Kata!

Anassa kata, kalo kale, ia ia ia Nike, Bryn Mawr, Bryn Mawr, Bryn Mawr! 

We didn't have digital photography when I was an undergrad at Bryn Mawr College, but thanks to Pinterest I was able to dig up a few nice photos of one of my favorite places, which will always feel like home. I went to Duke for grad school, spending the little time I wasn't in the field on the beautiful West campus--same architect who designed both Bryn Mawr and Princeton, but at the end of the day nothing compares to Bryn Mawr's campus. Except maybe Hogwarts, which bares a clear resemblance to the Bryn Mawr campus. 

THOMAS GREAT HALL


THE CLOISTERS

(yes, there are dead bodies buried in the walls)

(yes, this building looks exactly like Hogwarts)

RHOADS HALL
(my dorm for 4 years)


PEMBROKE HALL
(where Katharine Hepburn lived when she attended Bryn Mawr)
 

GOODHART HALL

DALTON HALL
(where I took most of my classes as an Anthro/Psych double major)

TAFT GARDEN

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Thank you, Garrison Keillor!

Inauguration is approaching and those of us living here in Washington, DC can't just ignore it. All of us liberals (93% of all voters in DC) are bracing for the future and many are still at least somewhat in denial, but Garrison Keillor's Washington Post essay, helps (see below). First, a Powdermilk Biscuit break from Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion":

Trump voters will not like what happens next
 


Garrison Keillor is an author and radio personality.
So he won. The nation takes a deep breath. Raw ego and proud illiteracy have won out, and a severely learning-disabled man with a real character problem will be president. We are so exhausted from thinking about this election, millions of people will take up leaf-raking and garage cleaning with intense pleasure. We liberal elitists are wrecks. The Trumpers had a whale of a good time, waving their signs, jeering at the media, beating up protesters, chanting “Lock her up” — we elitists just stood and clapped. Nobody chanted “Stronger Together.” It just doesn’t chant. 
The Trumpers never expected their guy to actually win the thing, and that’s their problem now. They wanted only to whoop and yell, boo at the H-word, wear profane T-shirts, maybe grab a crotch or two, jump in the RV with a couple of six-packs and go out and shoot some spotted owls. It was pleasure enough for them just to know that they were driving us wild with dismay — by “us,” I mean librarians, children’s authors, yoga practitioners, Unitarians, bird-watchers, people who make their own pasta, opera-goers, the grammar police, people who keep books on their shelves, that bunch. The Trumpers exulted in knowing we were tearing our hair out. They had our number, like a bratty kid who knows exactly how to make you grit your teeth and froth at the mouth. 
Alas for the Trump voters, the disasters he will bring on this country will fall more heavily on them than anyone else. The uneducated white males who elected him are the vulnerable ones, and they will not like what happens next. 
I like Republicans. I used to spend Sunday afternoons with a bunch of them, drinking Scotch and soda and trying to care about NFL football. It was fun. I tried to think like them. (Life is what you make it. People are people. When the going gets tough, tough noogies.) But I came back to liberal elitism. 
Don’t be cruel. Elvis said it, and it’s true. We all experienced cruelty back in our playground days — boys who beat up on the timid, girls who made fun of the homely and naive — and most of us, to our shame, went along with it, afraid to defend the victims lest we become one of them. But by your 20s, you should be done with cruelty. Mr. Trump was the cruelest candidate since George Wallace. How he won on fear and bile is for political pathologists to study. The country is already tired of his noise, even his own voters. He is likely to become the most intensely disliked president since Herbert Hoover. His children will carry the burden of his name. He will never be happy in his own skin. But the damage he will do to our country — who knows? His supporters voted for change, and boy, are they going to get it. 
Back to real life. I went up to my home town the other day and ran into my gym teacher, Stan Nelson, looking good at 96. He commanded a landing craft at Normandy on June 6, 1944, and never said a word about it back then, just made us do chin-ups whether we wanted to or not. I saw my biology teacher Lyle Bradley, a Marine pilot in the Korean War, still going bird-watching in his 90s. I was not a good student then, but I am studying both of them now. They have seen it all and are still optimistic. The past year of politics has taught us absolutely nothing. Zilch. Zero. Nada. The future is scary. Let the uneducated have their day. I am now going to pay more attention to teachers.